Publication | Open Access
Decline in liver neoplasms in wild brown bullhead catfish after coking plant closes and environmental PAHs plummet.
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Citations
16
References
1995
Year
Sediment PahsEcotoxicityPathologyLiver NeoplasmsEnvironmental HealthToxicologyFish ImmunologyToxicological AspectPublic HealthPlant ClosesPah ExposureEcotoxicologyChemical PollutionFish FarmingEnvironmental Pahs PlummetBiologyLiver CancerEnvironmental ToxicologyMedicine
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in both sediment and brown bullhead catfish tissues from the Black River in Lorain County, Ohio, declined by 65% and 93%, respectively, between 1980 and 1982. Sediment PAHs declined an additional 99% by 1987, coincident with the closure of a coking facility in 1983. Contemporaneously, liver cancer in 3- to 4-year-old brown bullheads declined to about one-quarter the 1982 frequency (10% versus 39%) by 1987, while the percentage of livers without any proliferative lesions doubled (42% versus 20%). These changes were significant within age group. Our data affirm a cause-and-effect relationship between PAH exposure and liver cancer in wild fish. The data also support the efficacy of natural, unassisted remediation once the source of the pollution is eliminated.
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